Alice Spruyt. Collection
Marcel Bracke was born in Antwerp on 9 October 1919. In May 1940 he fought as a soldier in the Belgian army during the invasion of the country by Nazi-Germany. After the general demobilization, Marcel Bracke returned to live with his parents and younger brother at Verlatstraat 43 in Antwerp. To avoid deportation to Germany as a forced labourer, he took a job with the city of Antwerp. As an electrician the city sent Marcel to houses and apartments formerly occupied by Jewish inhabitants to work on the infrastructure there. Although employed, Marcel Bracke was still sent to Germany as a forced labourer on 28 January 1943. He was repatriated to Belgium on 11 May 1945 and in 1952 he married Alice Spruyt. She herself lived in Antwerp during the war and had vivid memories of the roundups of Jews at Provinciestraat when taking the tram from her house at Vlaamse Kaai to a friend at the Cogels-Osylei. The couple built a family and in 1955 Marcel was recognized as a forced labourer. Marcel passed away in 2007. Contact Kazerne Dossin Documentation Centre: archives@kazernedossin.eu This collection consists of : a Megillah Esther, the scroll containing the book of Esther which is read twice during the Purim fest and which was rescued by Marcel Bracke from a Jewish home near the Antwerp city park in 1942 ; a copy of Marcel Bracke’s post-war forced labourer recognition card.
- EHRI
- Archief
- be-002157-kd_00572
- Antwerp
- Prewar Jewish life
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